24 April 2012

A little write-up about my Women's Spirituality Program

When I entered into the WS program at CIIS in 2010, I had no
idea what to expect. I was coming from
being a lecturer of English at CSU, Long
Beach. I also
worked as a women’s spiritual advocate at the Women’s ResourceCenter and at the InterfaithCenter
on campus. My focus was on British women’s
literature as well as women’s advocacy and spiritual well-being in my local
communities. Altogether, I didn’t know
how to bring together my spirituality, my love of literature and academia, and
my identity as a woman. A friend and
mentor told me to look up Women’s Spirituality at a school in San Francisco.

This Women’s Spirituality program has given me the space to
explore my spirituality and my identity as a whole. The WS classes have changed my life. Embodiment
and integration have become a daily practice, and I’ve learned how to bring my
unique voice into academic conversation.
I’ve been challenged and have grown on so many levels – from the
physical to the spiritual – and I am so grateful.

The community of women has also been one of the gifts of
this program. It is here that I found an abundance of women who speak a similar
language as my own. Where in other
schools and communities, I would have to be the voice to highlight the abuses
of patriarchy, in WS classes, I am supported to expand my way of thinking and
speaking to include the multiple oppressions in our world. Here I am encouraged to be more sensitive to
privilege as well as to grieve the violence I’ve suffered and celebrate how far
I’ve come.

And, I do believe I’ve come far. The WS program inspired me to make the
program my own. While working on my PhD
at CIIS, I’ve co-created an intentional farm community of women in VenturaCounty,
lived on a permaculture farm in the CuyamaValley, and studied independently in Europe. I am
currently working on my first comprehensive exam – (Re)Naming Ecofeminism –
bringing in my identity as an ecofeminist mestiza, and I will present a paper
on this subject at the AmericanAcademy of Religion
conference in Fall 2012.

I am thankful for the WS program at CIIS, and I look forward
to continuing my studies here these next couple years.

Cristina Golondrina

Cristina holds a doctorate in Philosophy and Religion. She is a multiethnic women of color. Sometimes she is read as white, sometimes racially identified as “non-white/other.” She is a writer and artist exploring the themes she analyzed in her dissertation: themes of being mixed race, multilocational, and the affects of racism and colonialism in her body, in her writing, and in the literature she reads.